List of female warriors in SF: Difference between revisions

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{{DEFAULTSORT:Warriors}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Warriors}}
[[Category:Character lists]]
[[Category:Lists of female characters|Warriors]]
[[Category:Violence themes]]
[[Category:Violence themes]]
[[Category:Characters by occupation|Warriors]]
[[Category:Characters by occupation|Warriors]]

Latest revision as of 19:19, 15 April 2008

Encyclopedia of
Female Characters
Issues in characterization:

Identities, representation, stereotypes
Roles, relationships, & character arcs

Indexes of female characters:

notable female characters ...
by occupation ...
by ethnic, sexual, other identity ...
by skill or ability ...
by series or work ...
Research and lists of female characters

Comprehensive:

A-G ... H-P ... Q-Z
browse index



"Amazons" would include strong warrior wimmin ... wymin who kick ass ... tough women. Although some of these works will also be listed as Women Revolutionaries!, a woman doesn't have to change society (or even try) to be an ass-kickin' warrior woman.

Note: "Warrior" may be distinguished from military personnel. Most specifically, military personnel serve in a state-based or independent mercenary military body, whereas a "warrior" may be a solo operator. The key distinction is probably on individual fighting skills versus operational skills in an army.

More generally, "warrior" often implies specific warrior and combat skills, such as hand-to-hand combat, sword, or archery; it has more of an old-fashioned connotation; it may imply a warrior's code or even a caste system; it might be used more in fantasy, dying earth, or low-technology societies. By contrast, "military" has more of a connotation of group-fighting skills; high-technology or specialized skills that may not even be combat or weapons skills (artillery, defense, combat pilot); a term that might be used more in spacefaring societies, modern- or industrialized societies with higher technology. Warriors in this classical sense and military personnel may mix in a society; see, e.g., Elizabeth Moon's The Deed of Paksenarrion. Similarly in military SF some characters may be specialized with combat skills and described as warriors.

List

by author

  • Nancy Farmer, Thorgil in The Sea of Trolls
  • Jane Fletcher. The World Celaeno Chose (Dimsdale: London, 1999) - features an all-woman world with several warrior organizations
  • Janrae Frank. "The Ruined Tower" (chapbook, illustrated by Mary Bohdanowicz; Atalanta Press, 1979)
  • Esther Friesner's anthology Chicks in Chainmail
    • Did You Say Chicks?
    • Chicks and Chained Males
  • Mercedes Lackey. Many of her Valdemar series have warrior women. See especially By the Sword, about the mercenary Kerowyn.
  • Tanith Lee. The Birthgrave (1975)
    • Night's Master (1978)
  • Elizabeth A. Lynn. The Dancers of Arun
    • The Northern Girl
  • Claudia McKay. Promise of the Rose Stone (1986) [a woman warrior leaves her village to save it and gets embroiled in something larger]
  • Sam Merwin. Sex War. (Descendants of Amazons are conspiring to get rid of men and reproduce parthenogenetically. Not exactly a feminist classic. -- lq 5/14/00)
  • C. L. Moore Jirel of Joiry series:
    • Black God's Shadow (collected J-of-J stories fromthe 1930s) (1977)
  • Joanna Russ. Alyx (1977)
    • Kittitiny, a Tale of Magic (1978)
  • J. R. R. Tolkien Lord of the Rings. A female character, Eowyn, disguises herself as male in order to fight in battle.
  • John Varley. The Gaean trilogy: Titan, Wizard, and Demon. Cirocco Jones, first and foremost, but also Gaby and Robin and others.
  • Jane Yolen's Sister Light, Sister Dark and White Jenna

Movies:

  • "Tank Girl"
  • "Alien"
  • "Aliens"
  • "Alien III"
  • "Born in Flames"
  • "Terminator 2"

TV:

  • "Xena, Warrior Princess" (and of course the novelizations)

Other Suggestions:

  • Dibell, Ansen. Pursuit of the Screamer (1978)
  • Duane, Diane. The Door Into Fire (1978)
  • Fearn, John Russell. Conquest of the Amazon (1949; Future, 1976)
  • Gearhart, Sally Miller. The Wanderground (Persephone: 1978)
  • Lupoff, Richard. Sword of the Demon (1977)
  • McKinley, Robin. The Hero and the Crown
    • --. The Blue Sword
  • Morgan, T. J. "Dark Tide" (chapbook illustrated by Theresa Troise-Heidel) (Atalanta Press, 1979)
  • Norton, Andre. Witch World series.
  • Vinge, Joan. Snow Queen (1979)
  • Weinbaum, Stanley G. The Red Peri (1952)
  • Robert A. Heinlein's works, esp. Friday
  • Melissa Scott's Dreamships
  • Peter S. Beagle's Innkeeper's Song
  • Jennifer Robersen's Lady of the Forest
  • Robin McKinley's Deerskin
  • Jane Yolen's Briar Rose
  • Sheri Tepper's Shadow's End
  • Feist & Wurts Servant of the Empire trilogy
  • Tomoe Gozen in works by Jessica Amanda Salmonson
  • "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" (movie & TV)

See also